What’s the Meaning of All of This Employee Lingo?

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Confused by some of the employee experience lingo you’re hearing? You’re not alone!

A couple weeks ago, I participated in a webinar with Kyle Antcliff of Intradiem. We talked about the employee experience, employee journey mapping, and solutions that drive or impact workforce efficiency.

During the presentation, a lot of employee experience terms were used, and I attempted to clarify with some definitions. I thought those definitions were worthy of sharing.

Let’s start with Employee Experience. I define it as:

The sum of all interactions that an employee has with his employer during the duration of his employment relationship. It includes any way the employee “touches” the company and vice versa in the course of doing his job.

It needs to be understood (using tools like personas, journey mapping, and surveys and other listening posts). And it can be designed/redesigned.

Employee Engagement is a phrase that gets thrown around a lot, so it’s important to understand what engagement means and how it comes about. This definition of engaged employees comes from Gallup.

Engaged workers stand apart from their not-engaged and actively disengaged counterparts because of the discretionary effort they consistently bring to their roles. These employees willingly go the extra mile, work with passion, and feel a profound connection to their company. They are the people who will drive innovation and move your business forward.

Engagement cannot be forced upon employees or mandated, dictated, or declared. No one can make an employee engaged. It comes from within, and yet the company has a role in it, as well. When  there’s some confluence of: (1) emotions, commitment, passion, sense of ownership, etc. on the part of the employee about the brand and (2) what the organization does (purpose, brand promise, who the company is and why, etc.) to facilitate and enhance those emotions or that commitment – then we have employee engagement.

…you have to want to be engaged. There has to be deep-seated desire in your heart and mind to participate, to be involved, and to make a difference. If the desire isn’t there, no person or book can plant it within you. -Tim Clark

What, then, is Employee Satisfaction? Is it the same thing? It is not. Sorry for the circular argument, but…

Employee Satisfaction refers to how satisfied employees are; it doesn’t address or include motivations or emotional commitment

To further clarify: some employees are satisfied because they get paid every two weeks, because the employer provides childcare, or simply because they have a job. That doesn’t really tell us much, unless we know what drives it. That puts the measure into context, but it’s not the ultimate goal – for employees or for the business.

How is Employee Happiness related? There are a lot of definitions of Employee Happiness out there, but this one struck a chord with me:

Happiness at work is a function of engagement, morale, and satisfaction.

That almost makes it sound like an “umbrella metric.” Does that mean it’s a good measure of the overall employee experience? Or is it a chicken and egg story? Does happiness come before (drive) or after engagement, morale, and satisfaction?

What is Employee Morale? According to Wikipedia, it is…

Employee morale, in human resources, is defined as the job satisfaction, outlook, and feelings of well-being an employee has within a workplace setting. Proven to have a direct effect on productivity, it is one of the cornerstones of business.

And finally, how does Employee Experience differ from Culture? People often confuse the two. What is Culture? Herb Kelleher, former CEO of Southwest Airlines, defined it as…

what employees do when no one is looking

I love that. I think it’s…

…the set of values and norms that guides how the business operates. Culture happens when we operationalize the values.

I also agree with these six components of culture, as outlined in an HBR article: vision, values, practices, people, narrative, and place.

You may have other definitions or thoughts on the differences in these terms. I’d love to hear them!

It’s sad, really, how a negative workplace can impact our lives and the way we feel about ourselves. The situation is reaching pandemic heights – most people go to work at jobs they dislike, supervised by people who don’t care about them, and directed by senior leaders who are often clueless about where to take the company.” – Leigh Branham and Mark Hirschfeld, Re-Engage: How America’s Best Places to Work Inspire Extra Effort in Extraordinary Times

Republished with author's permission from original post.

Annette Franz
Annette Franz is founder and Chief Experience Officer of CX Journey Inc. She is an internationally recognized customer experience thought leader, coach, consultant, and speaker. She has 25+ years of experience in helping companies understand their employees and customers in order to identify what makes for a great experience and what drives retention, satisfaction, and engagement. She's sharing this knowledge and experience in her first book, Customer Understanding: Three Ways to Put the "Customer" in Customer Experience (and at the Heart of Your Business).

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